Guest guest Posted March 11, 2008 Report Share Posted March 11, 2008 The whole point is for those skills listed below to be *experienced* and not necessarily " taught. " My son does have an ABA therapist that visits our home 3 days a week. She does a great job at getting him to identify pictures and learn new words, etc... However, he is a smart little guy and has learned to just repeat and memorize whatever it is that she wants him to say. Those words hold absolutely no meaning for him. Later, after she leaves, I create learning opportunities for my son in which the words or skills he merely memorized become something he experiences and is meaningful (floortime). As one example - he didn't understand the concept of " put on " when asked by his therapist and was unable to correctly identify the correct pictures of things you " put on. " Once she left, I created games where we had to put things on. Now - he completely gets it, but not because of identifying cards/pictures, but because we created a fun learning experience. In our situation - we can not break anything down into smaller skills and teach new concepts until Gabe is calm and regulated. The DIR model has taught us how to help him regulate himself and be comfortable enough to take in new information and learn. When we were skipping this developmental milestone before beginning the DIR model - he was never making much progress because he was constantly disregualted and a complete wreck! DIR emphasizes the unique sensory processing of each child and that has helped us tremendously in understanding how our son copes and learns. We now have a son who can become engaged, share joint attention, communicate purposefully, and sustain a continuous flow of circles of communication (although it is still a work in progress). Again, this model may not be for everyone and I truly feel there is real value in many of the therapies we have to choose from. Son Rise has always interested and may be something we look into in the future. I just wanted to share our experience with DIR/Floortime... Here is an article in Time a while back... http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1191852,00.html > I have also found it kind of strange that Texas Children's chose the > DIR/floortime approach rather than ABA. I don't know much about how > DIR works but as a behavior analyst, I don't really see how some of > those things in the list below could even be taught without breaking > those complex concepts into smaller skills and incorporating > behavioral or learning principles in some way. > > > > > > > It has always been very interesting to me that Bridges chose a > modality > > > that > > > has no solid research to back it up-but that's what happens when > the wife > > > of > > > the president of Texas Children's gets to run the show. > Floortime, while > > > it's currently being studied, was developed by a psychiatrist > who never > > > bothered to conduct a study to see if it was even effective. > Apparently > > > Texas Children's is so uninterested in science based > interventions, so > > > rather than choosing ABA, they chose something unproven and > charge people > > > a > > > LOT of money for it. > > > > > > " Most people say that is it is the intellect which makes a great > > > scientist. > > > > > > They are wrong: it is character. " > > > > > > Albert Einstein > > > > > > From: Texas-Autism-Advocacy <Texas-Autism-Advocacy%40yahoogroups.com> > > <mailto:Texas-Autism-Advocacy%40yahoogroups.com> > > <Texas-Autism-Advocacy%40yahoogroups.com> > > > [mailto:Texas-Autism-Advocacy <Texas-Autism-Advocacy%40yahoogroup\ s.com> > > <mailto:Texas-Autism-Advocacy%40yahoogroups.com> > > <Texas-Autism-Advocacy%40yahoogroups.com>] > > > On Behalf Of Dr. > > > Graham-Garza > > > Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2008 9:21 PM > > > To: Texas-Autism-Advocacy <Texas-Autism-Advocacy%40yahoogroups.com> > > <mailto:Texas-Autism-Advocacy%40yahoogroups.com> > > <Texas-Autism-Advocacy%40yahoogroups.com> > > > Subject: [sPAM]Re: Re: Speech & > Behavioral > > > Therapist-Houston > > > > > > I gotta put in my two cents here - we lasted in Bridges for a > month - at > > > that time (Oct. 2004) it was VERY poorly run, very expensive and > a > > > complete > > > waste of our time. > > > Re: Re: Speech & Behavioral > > > Therapist-Houston > > > > > > Did the Meyer Center not tell you about their Bridges Program > for children > > > > > > up to 7 years old? Bridges is a comprehensive therapeutic > program that > > > provides floortime, speech and language, occupational and > physical therapy > > > for > > > children with developmental challenges and their families. > > > > > > _http://www.texaschildrens.org/carecenters/Bridges/faqs.aspx_ > > > (http://www.texaschildrens.org/carecenters/Bridges/faqs.aspx) > > > > > > CReece > > > > > > **************It's Tax Time! Get tips, forms, and advice on AOL > Money & > > > Finance. (http://money.aol.com/tax?NCID=aolprf00030000000001) > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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